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ApplicationNote
The Aeroflex 6413A is designed for installation and
commissioning of new Node Bs in the field. It includes
all the
necessary test capability for transmitter, receiver andfunctional testing of a Node B - providing for 3G net-
works the role that the 6113 base station tester has so
successfully fulfilled for GSM. What sets the 6413Aapart from other Node B test equipment is its core
capability for straightforward receiver testing.
Enhanced Node B Receiver Testing
using the 6413A
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Node B Receiver tests - section 7of 3GPPTS 25.141
The key to making receiver tests is to measure the bit error rate
on the demodulated data. In the case of testing mobiles, this is
usually done by looping back the signal and demodulating the
signal in the test set. See Fig 1.
Figure 1 Equipment configuration for mobile testing
This allows a measurement to be made of the combined BER for
the receiverand transmitter. Providing that this falls within accept-
able limits, it is possible to confirm that the receiver is working cor-
rectly. However, this requires a loopback capability to be built into
the mobile. It also prevents the receiver from being tested on its
own. Unfortunately, Node Bs do not include a loopback feature
when they are being tested in isolation. Therefore, it is necessary
to find a means of extracting the demodulated data and
measuring the bit error rate.
Aeroflex's solution is to include manufacturerspecific code in the
test set that enables the Node B to be directly controlled by the
test set. This allows the test set to command the Node B to send
all demodulated data back to the test set via the Iub interface.
From this it is relatively straightforward to measure the BER and
hence obtain accurate measurements of the receiver. The test
setup is as in figure 2.
Figure 2 Equipment configuration for receiver testing, e.g.reference sensitivity level test
Benefits of Iub control
Aeroflex's approach has a number of benefits:
Ease of use - because the base station is controlled from
the 6413A setting up a test is much faster and easier.
Issues such as software download and Node B configura-
tion are automatically taken care of, leaving the operator
to concentrate on testing rather than how to use the test
equipment.
Independent - the 6413A does not rely on self-test rou-
tines or other built-in test routines in order to make meas-
urements. This makes it a truly independent receiver
tester, something that is essential for conformance
standard testing.
Additional test capabilities - besides making a range of
receiver tests, the 6413A also makes a number of func-
tional tests on the Node B. For example, it establishes and
maintains the Iub link to ensure that the Node B will
communicate correctly with the RNC.
Standalone testing - because the 6413A is able to control
the Node B directly, it is not necessary to have a connec-tion to the RNC while testing is being carried out. Thisreduces the risk that any malfunction or configurationproblem will affect the operation of other parts of the net-work. A major benefit of this is that an operator can testnew Node Bs before they are connected to the network,and be confident that any problems will be discoveredbefore they cause any problem with other parts of thenetwork
Proven test method - this method was first pioneered byRacal Instruments (now Aeroflex) with the 6113 GSM basestation tester. With over two thousand units in use aroundthe world, and adopted by virtually every manufacturerand network operator, it has been extensively proven asthe optimum means of testing a base station. The 6413A
is designed to test Node Bs in the same manner.
Portable and reliable - the 6413A has been designed tobe able to carry out all of the key measurements in a sin-gle instrument. Its rugged design means that it is easy totransport to any Node B that is to be tested; it can beeasily connected and tests can be made at a touch of abutton.
Extensive manufacturer support - regardless of whichmanufacturer's base station an operator chooses, Aeroflexwill provide the necessary control software to be able todirectly control the base station. The 6413A can also beconfigured to test multiple base station types, for examplewhen an operator installs base stations from more than
one vendor.
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Receiver testing - Test description and equipmentrequired
The following sections describe the test set ups required to carry
out the receiver tests defined in 3GPP TS 25.141. The relevant
section number of 3GPPTS 25.141, 7.x is also shown for ease of
reference against the actual specification.
Test 7.2 - Reference sensitivity level
This is the basic test of the Node B's receiver performance, toensure that it can demodulate a low level signal under ideal
conditions.
Figure 3 Equipment configuration for the Reference sensitivitylevel test
Aeroflex 6413A provides all the functionality needed toperform this test:
Generate the low level RF signal to stimulate the Node B's
receiver
Extract the received bits from the Node B via the Iub
connection
Compare the demodulated bits obtained via the Iub with
the known transmitted bits
Compute the bit error ratio, display and compare to limits
Care must be taken to ensure that effects such as cable loss do
not degrade the performance.
Test 7.3 - Dynamic range
Figure 4 Equipment configuration for the Dynamic range test
The Dynamic range test evaluates the Node B's receiver per-
formance with an interfering signal much greaterthan the wanted
signal on the same channel. It is related to the co-channel inter-
ference test on other radio systems, but uses the Node B's cod-
ing gain to extract the wanted signal from the interfering noise.
As for Reference sensitivity, the Aeroflex 6413A provides all the
functionality needed to perform the receiver Dynamic range test:
Generate the wanted RF signal to stimulate the Node B's
receiver
Generate the Additive White Gaussian Noise (AWGN)
interfering signal
Extract the received bits from the Node B via the Iub
connection
Compare the demodulated bits obtained via the Iub with the
known transmitted bits
Compute the bit error ratio, display and compare to limits
The 6413A generates the AWGN internally and adds it digitally to
the wanted signal, ensuring accurate signal to noise ratio and
eliminating the need for external noise sources and RF combin-
ers. Care must be taken to ensure that effects such as cable loss
do not degrade the performance.
Test 7.4 - Adjacent channel selectivity
Figure 5 Equipment configuration for the Adjacent channelselectivity test
This test ensures that the Node B's receiver can receive the want-
ed signal in the presence of an unwanted interfering signal on the
adjacent radio channel. The test specification in 25.141 calls for
the test to be performed with the unwanted signal at offsets 5 Mz
above and 5 MHz below the wanted signal.
The 6413Asupplies the wanted signal, via the coupled port of the
directional coupler, to the Node B receiver. The received bits are
extracted from the Node B via the Iub network side interface, and
compared within the 6413A to compute the bit error ratio. The
interfering signal is applied from the vector signal generator.
The signal generator providing the unwanted signal has to be of
high spectral purity to avoid too much noise falling in the wanted
signal channel which would invalidate the measurement by caus-
ing co-channel interference. Calibration of the transmission loss
of the various RF paths is needed to achieve the required levelaccuracy for both wanted and unwanted signals.
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Test 7.5 - Blocking characteristics
This test ensures that the Node B's receiver can receive the want-
ed signal in the presence of an unwanted interfering signal. The
test specification in TS 25.141 splits the test into several sections:
A set of tables with frequency bands, giving level limits for
protection from WCDMA signals in specific bands, and a
more general limit for a CW interferer over the frequency
range of 1 MHz to 12.75 GHz
A set of tables with frequency bands, giving level limits for
protection from Base stations in other bands co-located at
the same cell site, using a CW interferer
A set of tables with frequency bands, giving level limits for nar-
rowband protection, using a GMSK interferer.
The tables in TS 25.141 give the limits and measurement condi-
tions which apply in each case. The test can be performed using
the equipment as shown in Figure 6
Figure 6 Equipment configuration for the Blocking characteris-tics test
The 6413Asupplies the wanted signal, via the coupled port of the
directional coupler, to the Node B receiver. The received bits are
extracted from the Node B via the Iub network side interface andcompared within the Aeroflex 6413A to compute the Bit error
ratio. The interfering signal is applied from the signal generator (a
WCDMA or GMSK modulated signal in specific radio system
bands and a CW signal more generally). The CW signal is required
to be at high level (+16 dBm) in some radio bands, so the main
line through the directional coupler is used.
The signal generator providing the unwanted signal also gener-
ates harmonics, subharmonics, noise and spurious. At certain fre-
quencies these will fall at the same frequency as the wanted sig-
nal and could invalidate the measurement by causing co-channel
interference. Filters are therefore needed and may be a bank of
selectable filters if blocking tests are to be performed in more
than one radio band. Calibration of the transmission loss of the
various RF paths is needed to achieve the required level
accuracy for both wanted and unwanted signals.
Test 7.6 - Intermodulation characteristics
This test ensures that the Node B's receiver can receive the want-
ed signal in the presence of an on-channel interfering signal pro-
duced by intermodulation of two unwanted signals also applied to
the receiver at the same time. The test specification in 25.141 calls
for the test to be performed with a CW unwanted signal at an off-
set of 10 Mzand a WCDMA modulated unwanted signal at an off-
set of 20 MHz. The intermodulation product therefore falls on-
channel. ForGMSK modulated signals, different frequency offsetsare used.
Figure 7Equipment configuration for the Intermodulation characteristicstest
The 6413A supplies the wanted signal via the combiner to the
Node B receiver. The received bits are extracted from the Node
B via the Iub network side interface and compared within the
6413A to compute the Bit error ratio. The interfering signals are
applied from the signal generators and combined with the want-
ed signal.
As with other receiver tests, the signal generators providing the
unwanted signals have to be of high spectral purity, to avoid too
much noise or spurious falling in the wanted signal channel. Any
such noise or spurious would invalidate the measurement by
causing co-channel interference.
Calibration of the transmission loss of the various RF paths is
needed to achieve the required level accuracy for both wanted
and unwanted signals.
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The 6413A - designed for measurements
Inside the 6413A is a capable RF measurement system designed
to generate and analyze radio signals. The RF subsystem com-
prises three main components - a transmitter, a receiver and an
RF combiner.
The transmitter is optomized to produce an on-channel
signal,providing the wanted signal for measurements on the
Node Bs receiver. The 6413A achieves its level accuracy for
modulated signals by using a powerdetector in a feedback loop.
The level range is extended using a precision calibrated step
attenuator, with electronic switching for reliability and repeatabili-
ty.
The measurement receiver was designed using a simple clear
strategy-Digitize the signal as soon as possible, digitize it well, and
degrade it as little as possible before it gets there. The 6413As
measurement receiver uses a highly linear 14 bit A to D convert-
er sampling at 48 MHz and a 1 dB step RF attenuator before the
RF mixer maintains dynamic range across a wide range of input
levels.
The measurement receiver is backed by powerful DSP for signalanalysis.
The RF combiner includes the duplex function and a high power
input attenuator. Careful selection of components is as important
here as elsewhere, to maintain signal and measurement
integrity.
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Part No. 46891/958, Issue 1, 08/06
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As we are always seeking to improve our products,the information in this document gives onlya generalindication of the product capacity, performance andsuitability, none of which shall form part of any con-tract. We reserve the right to make design changeswithout notice. All trademarks are acknowledged.Parent company Aeroflex, Inc. Aeroflex 2006.
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